by bigmick » Mon Feb 27, 2006 8:10 pm
Redrider wrote:However, maybe the reason why none of current crop are scoring is down to the style of play.
Sorry I just can't buy this theory at all. "Style of play"? Let's just say we were to base out whole attack aroung the figure of Fernando Morientes. What "style of play" does anybody think we'd need to enable him to score regularly?
For starters, you can't play him in with a through ball because a) he generally sits too deep and even when he doesn't, he doesn't really play off the shoulder of the defender. His momentum is generally towards the man with the ball rather than spinning and going away from him which you need to play him into a scoring opportunity. And b) in the unlikely event he did show and spin, or open the door for the pass by getting side on and stepping back a few yards he hasn't got the pace and strength to hold defenders off and get a shot away.
He has got a decent hit with both feet. My own bet is this is how he will break his scoring abstinance with a shot from outside the area. He will have to get the opening to shoot however with either a piece of skill to make room (which he is well capable of) or from a helpful ricochet. Unfortunately he doesn't show off the main target (Crouch usually) with any conviction and pace which almost rules out the possibility of the ball getting laid back into his path.
The third option is from a cross into the area. Contrary to what many people on here believe, I don't think he attacks the ball with enough aggression and pace to score regularly from headers. I think he's probably scored one or two headers in his whole Liverpool career (although admittedly that is including one beautiful header at Anfield where he attacked it near post and glanced the ball into the far corner). If I'm wrong, and he is about to display the heading attributes of a young Shearer I'll be the first to admit it when he does. I have to say though that sofar I have seen no evidence of it.
The last option is of a strikers goal. A poached rebound, a ricochet off the post and he's the first there, a ball pulled back from the byline to an unmarked Morientes who has gone in and out, getting himself open in the box, the goalkeeper dropping a shot and Nando pouncing. It's unlikely. He doesn't make those sort of movements in the area. Not for him the Fowleresque moving when everybody else stands still goal poachers instinct. Of course if it hits the post and rebounds out straight to him he may bury it, but he doesn't actively make himself open in the box.
Cisse you'd try and play in with a through ball because he does play on the shoulder (although admittedly the wrong shoulder which is why he's constantly offside). He would get the odd rebound and deflection in the box because though he lacks awareness, he has got a searing burst of pace to get to the ball first.
Crouch would, will and does score with headers. He'll also show for a through ball and isn't quite as slow as many believe. He'll have a shot from distance and gets himself open in the box a lot. My feeling is that his current goal tally is almost but not quite acceptable for the type of player he is. My prediction is that he will score absolutely bags of goals for Liverpool.
Fowler is of course the one out of the four who moves, looks and thinks like a goal poacher. Every time somebody has a shot watch the slow-mo. You'll see all the heads turn and the bodies remain stationary as if cast in stone. All that is except for one unfit and overwieght striker who is living on his wits, arriving infront of the keeper waiting for the fumble. Note as Kewell gets to the byline and pulls it back, the rotund figure checking in, checking out and then in again to make himself open. Notice how when he doesn't get it he's on the move again in and behind his marker, all the while open. The ball hasn't come sofar but it will. When it does watch out for the portly strikers instant control and finish. He'll score goals aplenty if he plays with the right strikers. You want to talk about a striker who will score headers talk about Fowler, he'll score more than Morientes from crosses I'm certain of it.
So that's my take. Disagree all you like but I'm no moron when it comes to football. Strikers must offer threat, and good ones do nine times out of ten. Morientes offers no threat whatsoever and it's time for rafa to admit it. Whether some of the posters on here care to admit it or not is entirely a matter for them.
Last edited by
bigmick on Mon Feb 27, 2006 8:14 pm, edited 1 time in total.
"se e in una bottigla ed e bianco, e latte".